National security dominates Democratic debate
Story highlights
- Democratic debate begins with questions on Paris attack
- Clinton, Sanders and O'Malley are on stage Saturday night
(CNN)In
direct contrast with President Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton said
Saturday that ISIS "cannot be contained" but instead must be "defeated."
Her
comments at the second Democratic presidential debate of the campaign
season came a day after a series of terror attacks -- for which ISIS
claimed responsibility -- claimed more than 100 lives in Paris. On
Thursday, before the terrorist strike, Obama said ISIS was "contained."
Clinton
sought to balance her response to the attacks against her ties to the
Obama administration, which is under fire for its response to ISIS.
"What
the president has consistently said, which I agree with, is that we
will support those who will take that fight to ISIS," she said.
Three Democratic presidential candidates gathered in Des Moines, Iowa, for a debate that has been jolted by the terrorist attacks across Paris that killed more than 100 people and that the French President has declared an "act of war."
The
gunfire and explosions moved national security issues to center stage
in a Democratic primary that has so far largely focused on progressive
issues such as income inequality and controversies like Clinton's use of
private email during her tenure as secretary of state.
Both
of Clinton's rivals, Bernie Sanders and Martin O'Malley, seized on the
foreign policy discussion to quickly criticize Clinton for her vote in
support of the Iraq war when she was in the Senate.
"I
would argue that the disastrous invasion of Iraq, something that I
strongly opposed, has unraveled the region completely and led to the
rise of al Qaeda and to ISIS," Sanders said.
O'Malley
argued that the problem wasn't simply limited to Clinton's vote for the
Iraq invasion, pointing to "cascading effects" that followed.
"We
need to be much more far-thinking in this new 21st-century era of
nation-state failures and conflict. It's not just about getting rid of a
single dictator," he said.
As
soon as the debate began, it became clear that Clinton's views on
foreign policy, honed during her time as the Obama administration's top
diplomat, would be a major part of the discussion. The relative
inexperience of her rivals -- Sanders and O'Malley -- was also tested.
The
Democratic candidates contrasted themselves against their Republican
counterparts on the issue of the refugee crisis in the Middle East.
Though many GOP presidential candidates have said the U.S. shouldn't
accept refugees into the country, the Democrats argued that it's
America's responsibility to accept those fleeing violence in countries
like Afghanistan and Syria with proper screening.
Calling
for "as careful a screening and vetting process as we can imagine,"
Clinton, who has previously stated the U.S. should accept as many as
65,000 new refugees, said, "I do not want us to in any way inadvertently
allow people who wish us harm to come into our country."
Sanders
said he didn't want to state a "magic number," but that it was the
United States' "moral responsibility" to accept refugees in conjunction
with its allies in Europe and the Middle East.
O'Malley also said the country should accept as many as 65,000 refugees.
In
one part of the debate that Republicans are certain to seize on, no
Democratic candidate used the term "radical Islam" to describe
terrorists. This phrase is preferred by Republicans, who have accused
Democrats of shying away from a forthright description of ISIS.
"I
don't think we're at war with Islam. I don't think we're at war with
all Muslims," Clinton said. Cautioning against painting with "too broad
a brush," she added: "We are at war with violent extremism."
Sanders, meanwhile, said he didn't believe the exact term was important.
A lot has changed since Clinton, Sanders and O'Malley met for their first showdown in Las Vegas last month.
There were five candidates on stage at the time. Since then, two have dropped out.
Last
month, the possibility of Joe Biden jumping into the race and upending
the party's nomination process loomed large -- now, the country knows
that the vice president will not pursue another White House bid.
And Clinton, the party's frontrunner, has had plenty of fresh momentum heading into the debate.
After
a strong first debate performance, her poll numbers have ticked up and
she's widened her lead over Sanders. She now also has the Benghazi
hearing behind her -- a day-long affair on Capitol Hill where she
largely managed to avoid fresh, negative headlines.
end quote from:
http://www.cnn.com/2015/11/14/politics/democratic-debate-2015-updates-duplicate-2/index.html
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